30 A.D.2d 843 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1968
Appeal by defendant from an order of the Supreme Court, Queens County, dated February 23, 1968, which for the third time denied his motion to suppress certain evidence. Order affirmed. Previously this court affirmed defendant’s convictions, upon a jury verdict, of feloniously possessing a narcotic drug with intent to sell; and affirmed an order which denied his motion, after a hearing, for suppression of evidence (People v. Cardaio, 25 A D 2d 953). At that suppression hearing the People adduced proof that Lieutenant Mulligan (who did not testify) had informed Detective King that one Tod Konrad had complained that defendant robbed him of eight pounds of marijuana at gunpoint. Detective King and other police officers immediately proceeded to defendant’s home to arrest defendant and to search for the gun. Upon gaining admission to his apartment (the hearing Judge concluded that the officers had been invited in) the officers discovered the stolen marijuana. Tod Konrad testified that on June 1, 1964 (the day of defendant’s arrest) the police came to his apartment and questioned him about the robbery. He told them that he had been robbed at gunpoint but denied stating that defendant had done it. The hearing Judge said he did not believe the latter part of Konrad’s testimony. As stated earlier, this court affirmed the judgments of conviction and the intermediate order. The Court of Appeals withheld determination of an appeal from said affirmance and remitted the case for a further hearing on the motion to suppress stating that “it is incumbent upon the People” to adduce proof establishing probable cause where the source of the information denies he was the source (People v. Cardaio, 18 N Y 2d 924, 925). At the second hearing Lieutenant Mulligan testified that other police officers had informed him of the presence of marijuana at Konrad’s residence. He and other officers proceeded to that address to determine if such an apartment in fact existed. Konrad accidentally accosted the officers in the common hallway and personally informed Mulligan about the afore-mentioned robbery and described one of the assailants as defendant. Konrad also gave Mulligan defendant’s telephone number. The hearing Judge denied defendant’s request to permit Konrad to testify as a rebuttal witness and denied defendant’s motion to suppress the marijuana. A new order was entered thereon and defendant again appealed to this court. This court affirmed the findings of fact and observed that the testimony of Lieutenant Mulligan established that Konrad was the source of the information upon which the police had probable cause. However, in view of the Court of Appeals mandate we reversed, on the law, and remitted the case for a full hearing to permit Konrad to testify as a rebuttal witness (People v. Cardaio, 28 A D 2d 1144). A third hearing was conducted on February 21,1968 before Judge Shapiro. The transcripts of the two prior hearings were offered by defendant and accepted